Joseph Schneider Haus National Historic Site of Canada

Formally Recognized:
1998/12/15

Exterior Photo

Other Name(s)

n/a

Links and documents

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Construction Date(s)

1816/01/01

Listed on the Canadian Register:
2004/12/09

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place

Located on a major arterial road in the city of Kitchener, Joseph Schneider Haus National Historic Site of Canada is a remnant of an early 19th-century Mennonite homestead. It survives as a house museum with a two-storey frame house, reconstructed outbuildings including a bake house and wash house, a period garden, an orchard, and a piece of parkland near a former mill pond. The designation refers to the elements of the house, outbuildings and landscape surviving from the early 19th century Mennonite homestead.

Heritage Value

Joseph Schneider Haus was designated a national historic site of Canada because of its association with the main migration of Pennsylvania-German Mennonites from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania to Waterloo County in the early 19th century and because it preserves the vernacular house plan developed by the Mennonites in pre-American Revolutionary Pennsylvania.

About 1816, a homestead was established by Joseph Schneider who led the major migration of Pennsylvania-German Mennonites north from the United States in 1807. The core of Schneider’s property was converted into a museum in 1979.

Character-Defining Elements

Key elements illustrating the heritage value of the site include:- surviving elements of the early 19th-century homestead landscape including the depression from the Schneider Creek watercourse and evidence of the original land use such as the organisation of the property into formal setting and view in front of the house and work area adjacent to the kitchen;- orientation of the house toward and set back from Queen Street;- evidence of original vernacular design of the house including its rectangular massing, modified neo-classical exterior design and detailing with pitched roof, end chimneys, large verandah, and slightly irregular placement of window and door openings;- evidence of traditional Mennonite plan of house interior with 4-room plan with wash house on main level and five rooms above;- evidence of heavy timber frame construction techniques and surviving construction and finishing materials from the evolution of the house through the 19th century;- archaeological evidence of early 19th-century Mennonite use including foundations of the original wash house, Hof and well.